The Sentinel, 1883-04-06, Page 3_
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THE NICHPILSON DIVORPE,.
Vile Waxman's Itietence Room the •teenate
committee.
* 40417,Erelar Titaiaalrett. tea Ilan. 11131313111YD,
An Ottawa daepatole says : The :Nioholson:
Divorce Committee of . the Senate met
to -day.
Mr. Macdougall, for the respondent;
moved that the petitien be _distills:bed on.
the ground of collueioineinsultioleut proof
'that adultery,- bite been committed, and
became the petitiouer had not brought an
action agaieet the: ,ulteged eedueer of his
•
After, 'ono tetion the. Clinceittee dis-
missed the tuhtuni. .
„. Rosetta Nicholson, wife of Reter Nioliol- •
•'son, was then called. .she said before her
. marriage her parente moved liona .Mar-
quette to' lereee Mines, where she, firet saw
Peter Nieholsou. She was 14 years of age
• whets • they. removed° • to • Baum Mina.
• A year aftetWeeel he commenced • to
pay.. addeesses, 'te. •. her, ',• end the
mooed or third year afeell going to
BruCe.Milies he proposed marriage. They
lived at Brace Mines foe thiee years and
then moved to llarrisville/ Mean d'ar.
Nicholson visited - them there, end ,vas
finally acoepted as her husband. The
.inarriagetook •pleen i Toronto. • The
'couple went. to Bruce minee, *here lint
• 'children were born to them. Nicholson, •
after '' a . few years' • residence • there, was.
• appointed' Collector of' Custettet, at Prince
Arthur's Landing, and they 'removed-
• thither. Ai., thejattee eleetateatete eet, d
e•-e•eserd.ene,PW'PReoFr Qtxt'alke injuries are absolutely dangerous
to igioholson'e.i creel treatmeut there was in themselves, but there is min:deem' fear,
no arrival.. At Bruist Mniartehere watt 'an dtviiig to her advanced age and somewhat
• espionage en her • by her husband, and by delicate centlitionof health, which for
his former wife's mether *setting 'the chit- stime gran has been dangetetiee that ohm.
• Area to watch -all her . Actiene. Ie was plications may arise. Vhe crowd 'sup
'very cruet to her, and even kicked- her rounding the bulletin' was so great that
. • 'down the staire three Or four times. those•in the tear cotild•not make it out, BO
•On • otte • occasion the treatment she A strongedoiceds man' mounted it pilo of
received was eb serious .that she • was paving -atones and cried out the
intelli-
siokabed. After their retrieval to Prince genee. When the mail -motioned to. make
Arthur's Landing the otu:elty ozntfnued. his, &tit utterance the entire crowdealthaoSt
e On *one occasion at breakfast he geld he eiteltudvely composed of :Werke:ten,
disfigure her for life, and: thew -a govered,•and Was still. . The bulletin pro -
breakfast plate at her, stilling her iu, the duced a Most evident depreesiont
•. head Said., pausing her to faint. He gave no • Leeeit..-.:The Queen's physiaisme authorize
• reason for such conduet laleond saying that ,the etateMent that Her, Majesty is in. no
ifoihe left hiar he 'would diefignie her se •Maniediatedanger, but may,: however, be
that -she cOuld not go soother. Mane Had confined for an indefinitetime to her toone
she not (thicklyturned her head .it would It is understood that the Queen Is suffering
• have struck hr ia the face. [The soar of, quite as much from ekhandtate produced.
• the wetted wee found in thd,Wolititil'e head :by taking the long ride after her injury, for
' by Medical e-xperts on the porninittee.] He the purpose of disabusing the public Mind,
stayed; at home that day nied dressed: the of the'impreaston that. he was . butt, ' as.
'wound. • On differentpoottsimis he Ordered from the consequences of the Wound itself.
'her to quit the house, and.he secreted pro. Thiti fortitude is a theme otiiiiivereai coin -
visions *Abe Cadet& House: The evening ment, the working people seeming to • glory.
• after he threw' the plate at her she went to iirtalking • about the bravery of the Queen..
'bed eariy, feeling sick, and did not .rise • 21.30 p.m.—The bulletins anus:tune! that
early the neat day, and he threw -a dish the Queen .is resting comfortably. The
of tea grounds in bar faceto gether out physicians' Claim to have ciniquerectell the
, of bed. The eldest bey (Who was there) elements whieli Might prove tfoublesOm
dashed a pail of odd • water over • her 'A midnight cable de etch states t
VIE QUBEN'S APOIDENT
••••••••41!114•••ara•••••••
Her :Majesty's: Injuries More 'Serious thee
• First Reported., "
,ataST'
44'
,
!MA iva
wheiesaie eiseassInstelett leeelete 'du-
earthred-sheridan nem" te he Inapfie
eated-Parnews °pluton et the Dina?
mite Mende.
Thn,Freentenda Jaurner.-deei not believe
Mesers. Parnell and Sexton. will attend the
INTENSE E)CCITEMENT BN BRITAIN'. Philadelphia convention. , .
4 London cAblegram says: The icuries The rease of Nugent and twelveother
received by the Queen on Saturday by members of the Armagh A.esassinatioe.
slippIng upon the stairs of the Palace at Society was called at the Belfast aseizew
Windsor how turn cut more serious than to:day. The Crown couneei said he would.
was at /met ehpposed. , It is belivecl that provethat the society was established by
she will be confined td her zoom threntime., one Borns-, who came from .Atherica.
After the 'accident tire , Queen took a ride.
On roturning*afid attempting to leave the returned to A.meeica,"Npeent became dire°,
carriage she found she was unable to do sa, tor el the wady.. Burns, he iraid,
and the attendants' had :to carry her to her ,ednalgamated all the societies on the eolith'
room. Her physicians found the knee nenkinto one organization for murdering
badly swoollen aud.inflamed. The Queen agistrates, agents and landowners.
is constantly attended by fell corps of A vast , raitehinertt ' of , revolt and
meat pneateiaue, and eveay effort is being defiance was set . going by the
made to, confine the swelling. There is members of' this ,. • monster. - league,
int& uneasiness throughout the City cop- who received. orders in secret whioli.they
earning thecondition of the Queen, and were pledged to carry out even with pistol,
crowds stand about `the bulletin. places dagger; or dynamite. Meetings were held
eagerly watching and asking for news. at which neurders were.decided epee, and
Great, numbers of buoineee men have the victims of this - horrible conspiracy
posted up notioeset their places -of business indicated. Assassination nourished and
and gone to their °laths, newspaper . build.. murder stalked through' the land. Itis
ings-and telegraph -offices to await lieWa• said by the Government that P.
J. Sheri.
The newspapers have all sent epeolal or- dan will be implicated by a reliable witness:
respondents to Windsor and made coni- " . The police possess a clue to the explosion
.plete arrangements for bulletins. The; in the office of the Local' Government
House of Parliament is crowded, and the ,Board on Thursday. A woman observed
street 3 in many places are blocked by and has °fully described ;the appearance of
1
laboring people, who have -knocked off it man who Was .apparently placing an
work in their anxiety to keep well, in- infernalnamhine against the building. It
termed. ' It ie not, believed by those•havtit ikteilamtaggtear eyeet-eresat=edeeereeetteeeeeaorg.
' 74,
expressly for the purpose, and after Burns
a
Hthe same reorninge_had. the -Queen -in -1W on 'ne' o indoor
...„-i--e------:•-eartetiettrthieHouse Were the flame ,Cestle.by the swelling', of her knee.' The
' • ' sugar, and all the neoestiaries of life. The journey to Othorne.House has bethapose-
• follawingday.he went to Duluth, leavieg her postponed • temporarily. Tier /.Majesty's
.at-home.,with the children. .She had him •general health is good. / •
lamed ovd to keep the neve for vete year, • '
. • .
shit went helive atthe Queerds Hotel. He 'Dien Whit Git due
afterwards gat her • to return to his bottle,
• . where they- lived. about eix inehtint; 'Meta
Auguste 1876. 'After 4ex-retina things tan
smoothly for tie 'or three Ilea re when he
said they tenet pert &she 'did. not with-
draw her. nothpleiut egainet . She
•,!refuSed to do. rio, reed etapeittere did not
ridge itl.#.1e. heuse; tle often/used inault-
; ing vielenoe' towards her. He Inked' her
. to leave. hire; Which .she did, goieg. to her
fetheraeletiting her...children; with het. ' Ile„
- refused to thrtechildrento go With her.
"There is no such A
gambler ere a square'
city of New Yotk, a
it," said•Mr. J. H.
Hall, Friday evening, in a lecture • on
"Gamblers, or -How :Gamblers Win.", As
an evidence /that he did not speak
unadvisedly,(the lecturer announced that
his exinrience as a ,gambler extended. over
a period of more pan twenty years.
"Gamblers," he tontinilea„ '!‘ ea41 all those
outsde of the fraternity suckers.? They
'rig as et 'square
ambling,hell in'the
very few oetteide, Of
tauley. Chickering
*ethers, Realm at Nodal iiihundpoliela
-11aPPY and fortunate little woman st
home, who haver felt called upon to write it
line for the papers in .your life, do you
realize what an enviable. lot is yours? 11.
for nothing else, beeeuse it never occureto
you; that the flotsam andletsarn of...chimer-
elation, the besides of natere,the flyin
it bird against the wind, the bit of wisjom
droppedquaintly from the lips of • a eibild;
are each and, all good' • inateriale to be
woven . into yein weekly ' or emonthly
budget,. The erriting., habit ,': "(be. glad,
that it. is ' not yours) , 4"i:otherwise.
One gets to be ever einAhe alert; helf
intoOnsdionsler; too, and et, ' ythitter that one
beers is Mentally. seized upon for future
use. • Like the bird e which go darting here
and there in the spring sunshine, catching
ribright lined thread, ok a Shred of wool, or
it Wisp of hey; wherewith to bend their
nests;:. we of I ..„the journalistic • profession
think nothingehadeertent or inappropriate,
which
fabrics. :. much by way of preface, if not
Iinto our modeet
eteenay . blend ' :
of apoiegy. And new. for .. what one dirk -
eyed woman said to her, neighbor, in:the
public tiotiveyance'whieli accontneodated a
throng,ot passengers: : '..' • : ,
/4" She had cernapletely effaced herself for
'her . daughters. . Everything ;.ite. done to
accommodate Helen and Julia, 'and'
haeupersedede-WedaTe seem- tust
right' tome that :a.' motheeshould be kept
altogether' in the background."
.". Oii," said , the. sweet -looking . ledy. to
wheel this:was 'addressed, "'self.denitil- is
()arty to Mothers. Whet is a mother's life
anyway, but n sacrifice 'all through?" ,
•I agreed,witb, the firiat speaker. • It don't
seem tight to nin that the. Helens and
Julies,' bright; , beautiful; : •bewitching
though • they . may be, should .step to
the front inselfish absorption 'and. , mono-
polize the beet things; while "mother," a
pale, colorless, .warti-out figure, • is Nvearting
.••'..: 'T 'old dressasereading old ,hooks-. or none at
all, seeing few friends, and. 'fivinge hum,
drum:life of :routine, 'chiefly enlivened by
Conflicts with'Bridget's stupidity and Noultat
impertinence. Indeed it•is not .right, and
Helen and Julia, flashing • like butterflies
. until she had eigeed a doeument teleaamVoleiee that it 'sucker' is :•born every, in thesunny7 Morning. of : youth, would be
. ehine •frope' alt liability ter deka, .eto., and minute,: and that eleyir. -yore hi the the.last toeeloy their warm and copy houte.
, .,... made anagreemene to give itioziey to fitip /greatest plane in the . *odd for them. if therfelettiet they Were, eespeneitilit for
•,
port ehe Caildren. • ,The ebotdderation wit caxistenee.
There are what araealled ' akin ' gamblers, the monotony of their: mother's
$100 a .Year, Robert*,:Maitlaiitt :being ' her but I can assure yoh that, thinte termed Mother ' kataelf„„eateepereeneeettatette ,
'trustee. He ;aye her. 50 b Ageeteeeeteerd, ' eesedreetreetee74;'' *age. For eine'. Is easy iedeed .to a. real
elehttfffirde loepayee-thiadairetwoeyeare, The New York" Herald a yew! ago stated reother.'Frem the hour:whet; her native fitst
, ...e In 1878, teeeivteg no •rooney; shewent . to that it 020,000,000 knnually, to support over-hrimined eviihdfie.tidid ranting which
„the Landh:g. and Wee eurPtised to tied the brokers Of Wall street.. In the city ,ef sweeps .full-ilooded: into the heat that
...:.(1inewing ' 'Ng:holt:MN pentitiodseess) the Neve.: York • <there are at lease 10,000 cradles it babe, threggh the weary weitchihg
:• house: ,finely : fitrinshed. hours of teethieg and whooping -cough,
.A... agteeroont ganiblers, who ..sPencleofi an .avetage Of
was drawn up .1by which he allowed her 62,000 .a year: Add the '.reets. of the. ESSISpfa and : tneaeleti; on through sithool
' 0200 it year., ' She left for :her father's gambling lie is with the winnings ' of the days and vacation days and courting da.yei,
hhree, and • : Ofterwarde •went to Deft* gamblers, ' is-epeured-outeandegivera
by d20,000,000 enoteee orett40,e,•..thateneetherdidife:-
..te earn her ' livieg:. There she hadet rob • ittceeettetly, for her children. :So it ihtitild
-00013f40-t ale-Thie-iii-ifirereolnee from
...e.--...e.-eeertta-Rhuda-Wniale . 7:1-ilierwards she In every. child the mother
the po et and middling -abates.. There are he in &oohs°. :
.. •
()
, 'Tented a houee. Mre. jehneon and child. at 1eaet 150,000 men and boys in this city
who' gamble; ,each contributing .on an
ay rage 0300 annually for the :eupport of
the vilest and most hardened (Plass of
wretches on the feria of 'the earth • The
legtiner explained in detail the roe' hods by
which the dealers in gambling &eamake
certain of it sure thing., I .
boarded with her, and were with her hp to
the time shel'eft Detroit for Ottawa. Miss
Denial made tetiall p,t4 her, (Addicting to be
, a friend, but oielthe reeeonclente knew/the,
Woman was there . to a,ct a8 .a spy on her
&otrona Misi Deniele sew it child on the
bed.. It wae Mrs. Johnson's child- Miss
Daniels , infenmed her of Nicholsons'
presence iu the city and of the friendliness
of the two.: It Was, even hinted that the
relations of :Nicholson and Mies Daniels
were ietiniate, and thet if he were divorced
. he Would marry her. Bine N icePoirion 'denied
any. improper conduct, and said, she was,
trying to (own her living heatedly, •while
• attemptsevere reside trying to hound her
down. • • • • • - •
' The comMittee.thenadjourned:
'
The Girnae's Chaining. '
As to mimicry; the giraffe has the mod
astonishing power of any sive Dr.
IL W. Mitchell. Inhabiting, as it dos, the
foredo . of Africa and ,fe,edin-g • upon the
bough's of trees, its great size. makes' it, a
most eonapieuotIS'objeet. Its mod dreaded
enemies are the stealthy lion and, man. In
the. regions it, -meat frequents ' are many
dead and blasted trunks' of • trees, and its
• , mirniory is stieh that the most practiced
k Death of ,as C eniiinatritatc. h
, eye has. failed to distinguish -a -giraffe front
A New York telegram seri : The death a tree trunk or a tree trunk -from a. giraffe.:
• • • of Mrs. Van Der Linde ,BriekenhOff, aged' ,It has even been said ' that a lion has looked
' 1014eare and 21 dayieis annofincieci to -day. long :end ,eareestfy at, a giraffe, in doubt
• • Sheclied at the retidence of her . daughter,, Whether it ,yeatil a tree or not, and then
Mrs. Hubbel, of New York. Mrs. Brinken. fiktilked away. . •
hoff was Apparently in good health until a
few days ago: 'She leaves 61 descendents: lanleiat Anstrallin News.
'The d,eceased was it great-granddaughter
of Philip, Peterson Schuyler,. who end-
, grated trent Holland to A.merio. , in 1650.
Ile.was the founder andlirst governor,' ei
Albany,: His father Was Colonel Adrian
,Brinkenhoff, of Thvoiuti�iiar.y farrae.On
• .Tuesday evenieg litat she entertained
. Beyond of her grand -children with redollee
tions of Wrishingten, Lafayette . and other
• Itevolutiot ary heroes. .
At Liverpool, March 9th; at„ sure of one
thousan guineas, " voted by the 'under.
writete f that oity, was given to the cap.
• tain a cre*ef the,steatnehip Qdebrio, in
reeo tion 1 the manner in which they
had safitlY navigated the veered itite Liver.
pool with her redder broken. Captain
• Gibeon. Who had command of the otettmer,
, was presented with t.500., .
'
A San Premier:3o telegrant says : Austra-
lfan advice's , state that the subject of
interoolonial free trade has been :revived.
If it is aceettplithed lederation is.expeoted
t� follow. , • ,
HeaVY rains ari) reported throughout Vic-
toria. In the western portion much
damage has been, clone by floods. There
have been ftightfal thunderstorths with
gales and hail in Queensland-; the cropfl
are thistroyed,band,rnany sheep lutete been
killed.' •
'Mr. and, 1/rs. Kendal cannot visit knle,
ri0a- next Season. -
The first Mate ball of the Serieon WAS
given at • Dublin Castle, last, Week, the
guests numbering OVet 1,200., The Whole
suite of ditto apartmente Wag thrown open,
both the Patrick's Hall and Mitone Room
• If it be true that " there's nothing half being devoted to the dancers. VieeroYalty,
se. Sweet in life as love's young dream," it: whose N.privileges, like those of • royalty,
is equally trtio that there la nothing half r30 biota° an inVerinott of the natural orderel
awful as an, old and Worn -Out leve'e night, things, does not receive,.but is received, by rourid the mull daily to Ate her tie she takes
4* Mittel ' its gueeta On date ettetteionS. " her departure.
renesirs her yentli,and each soh and deugh-
teals an additien to the home weelth. '
But eotne,of you mother, to where I am
talking, , ettrry your ..self-saorifice so
far that you forget that you have
any - lifeof your owe, for which you •
are responsibletoGod. You spend ' your
1
Lenteatielf' !MOM litomigh
ttetei II/val./be Vateletan-FhltePePe Vacates
" . an American a miireedie
4 despatch from Ilmmemayselfr.Janies
Canby Bidolle Cope, au .Anterican citizen
residieg in Cotswold, Gloucestershire, Eng-
land,- presented, to His 'Holiness not long
ago it large sum of money for the atholic
Schools of Rome. ,His Holiness has created.
him it Marquis.-• •
The antropomtro is a machine invented
by an Italian. It is used in clothing and
equipping a soldier. A 'hundred Italian
soldiers were 'clothed and equipped by its
use in -less than an hour.
Owing .to the nomination of Polish
Bishops,which have . been retarded by nego-•
iti2a:;oe.swith, the lt,ussia7 Government, the
Consistory net be_held-natileMareh-
-" The. Pepe lately received a Mexican
delegation frighted with Peter'apenee. He
expressed his sympathy with a nation so
firmly Catholic, and regretted hie Puppy'
siou of diplomatic' relations between tbe
Church and the Government of t
republic.
The Pope has admitted to his pr eence a
tarty of Russian•faxmers belonging to the
Greek Chun*. A Polish. priet told him
that they had expressed a great desire to
see him. They.were from-' Ekaterinoslay
and Mitten. Delighted ,with their recep-
tion, they drew thett heeds from their
pockets and asked the Pope to bless thein.
They conversed freely with himthrough an
interpreter, aild, after hiesing his hands;
fteleta...tdeekeeeteee..-tez:Meneeteeersee':"et
The deittlrof Cardinal lgnizio de a.th3i•-
meiato. Mopes Cardosa,,,Patriarch of Lis-
bon, leaves
hats are hew to he given„
another vacancy he the Sacred
College.'one e, hi& was reserved in pet& by the
Consistory of December 3.3th, 1880. Car-
dinal Federico Giovanni Giuseppe, Celes-
' ne Schwarzenherg is the only 'living
cardinal created by Gregory XVI. • Of the
remainder, 41 *ere created by Plus IXe
aud 20 by Led'XIII. • . • ''•
, Cardinal Manning is expected heee. after
Easter; to settle the election of his coadju-
tor, apparently tilreadY designated in the
person. of Bishop Vaughan. . He is Also to
appear as a witness. in' a, great case whit%
will "reheard by the Propaganda.
' ON 'LAKE AT111(.11111116.CA. •
"A lelneel Where People Lave -Together
- 'Without 'Money.,
Gaptain'DaWS0h, velidis in imminent]: o1.
one of the'British cireuinprelar expeditififis,
• gives in Nature thispieture river and
'lake Athabasca.. On. julte28th, he writes:
"We reached the Athabaska, it splendid
river„ Usually half a mile in widthtsome-
tiines more. Its course•is pretty straight
to the ninth,sit we 'often had it view' of.
Home fifteen ,niilea Or so down the valley.
Atewe drifted down the rivet:the pines be-
gan to give. place to poplarathq„peplantO,
-willowrthe-101114*-tb-reede, till at lad we
saw Lake Athabaska before us,. a rooky
:meet to the moth. • and td the east Water.
as •far as the eye cetild rental.' Afresh
breeze took us across the •Jakeintwo
hours, and we received • a hospitable Wel.'
'co* at Fort ChipeWaien, together With all
• • .• • '•• • ,
Bents et luxuries that •• had. become quite
Acreage to us.
"Thisiii quite alarge place ; ;there are
aboht'a drezeti houses,' two churehee, two
;bislieps, a eisterbood, andeome miesion,
arias'. The country.is.reoky and most deso-
late. • . To the south and west the . great,
lake atidoheti away t�' the .. horizon,
(tad the • land view • is. composed 'Of
hillabf reddish granite, no seileplants grow.
int; .here and there :out of- ooriesional
ereVitiera' and a aeve stuuted firs scattered
about. There are woods inthe-velletes, but
.the trees are of no size. No ecrintdbreeke
the,stillness but the weird cry of: the loon,
a sett of maniacal laugh that is almost a
Weil; and the solitude is heightened by th •
reflection th' tetatetedefeetWeeeteeteelteee ,
eetait'alid'etirit all bs wilderness. Toward
the. bike the vile* is pretty,. as...there are
many' islands 'covered with pines, •
is. curious diving together without
money; as one does in this adultery. Every-
thing itedehei by liereete the pule of value
being 4 akin; #io average value of nbeaver,
eliza is said to be worth twenty ducks, or
bitty whitefieleoretwehtyplegstof tobation,-
Ifittiet for it plug of tobacco' (about an oz,)
one can get a.d.uoker two whitefish, a large,
fish about two. feet icing and very good eats.
lug. This 'place; like ail' other habitations
in theNorthwest, ewer* ' with 'large
wolf -like dogs. :Y:These are used in
for drawing cartiolere, and it team Of four
:4:lege Will draw 500 pounds: or more, The
Indians use thee), too; in the aunerner as
paokanireals.".
strength so freely nada) xeckleeely during , • ,
the .years . of You; -children'schildhood e ales. lainagarea lansiannd,
that you have nit eleatiOity, no' *resources,
no health left to sparc. tty.the tinP,e they are 01 al" in'tiL4,,ngtrY'S husband is a queer sort
grown op.... You so d.e.eotee .youreskill arid said Coune Bozeinta, Mite.
talents' to the • inateria.1 •aide of the hiPise ,Modjesira'e fiuthand, to. a knot of friends..
that you nave no time to keep. up with the "W"ji I
ourrent'of the .world's thought, or AC grow ing dritngtestery in the chibe abolithire
Wattled •in Len
don they were tell.-
iotelleothally with your young people. ,,wbich was • ver‘Y. LaligtrY• "Ti8
-Many a geed:Woman suffers .4d religious some propertY in Ireland, "and •it appetite,
life to droop . and languish, beatilSe ,thett his "agent '.wrote him sayingl• that the
in her thoughtleed •giaieg. up < tenahts demanded lewd tenni and bad
evory meemme ey time ai.4 ee. clear.; threateited: to. tesort te thee eitotglin policy
remeeht,ete..nereeew feeee to the• aeny to -gamete thein.,: Mk. Langtry seized pen
demands, of her household, she has absa, Sad pamper and. wrote baok s.1 follows :
lately neopportunity left for sitting:it the ti hue? ar epy 1 rt h: r re. .ratreaYshalioYet you will never
to my tenants
rivseenteuptss !rt. Society is not, in our' eittee,
wholly to the yoxiag as it was a littniticlwataestm:i.; ? neer consolatien hie the
few years ego. In feet, there can be no '-er
Pedal mead? w.here Only the crudity elearly . .
youth appears on the settee. Older people The Spread el Leprosy.
'who brivg to the front the•tact, the 'expel- . Remit& adeicereestate .that three hue.
enee and the knowledge they have gained Area thousand equare mile e •of the most
through the years; Med • mingle in • deni3e1rpopulated portion of the kiegdom
the 'social gathering, if •it is to bo witty, hale ben searched for•lepere,, with a view
brilliant and attractive**. :Tile' tcrethere of ascertaining whether thereis a general
must be in the Van, and the daughteisees. ,spread of. leprosy. TIVentyeight native
befits their age, a little in the sheltering and ten foreign lepers Were faded. Theta
shadow, if We are to have the ideal 044 are ten foreign, lepers at the leper settle-
life•growing mit of tbe ideal home life. I 'meet at Molokai, moat el whom contracted
am very feud of thi3 Helene and Jalitte. 1 the disease by licentiousness. •
like their•sparkle, the* vivacy, their egprit. •
But I da tat like -their want of considera• Mr. and Mrs. George .11; Knight have:
M.611 tOt mother if is,i-perhape, it little decided to make a tour of the world.
old-fashioned, a little tired, it little,difddent
'
Luv and respect yure Wife ennyhow, if is
and frightened iff tEe blaze of • their splen-
aor.Ted° and tenderly -loving claughtote .0 good deal oheoPO than 40 he .611 the time
win never be contented to Id mothers efface :witalling she vvoodsOniehtAt different 7 '
•
themselves, even theugh"self,denial be an The Popo has reoeived.Offioial inforila-
cady maternal duty. *
, .. , tion of the OZat'1,4 approaching coronation.
. . The question of the representation of the
A, llow . celing—The pickpocket . St Pope is under consideration, and J11014/08
. great diffibulty, Boeing that he Replan
vr°*-ricT.he' ro'igin*ilig beauty ,of Ireland • is a
Belfast Vill O. Clotids -A,t is said, Bur.
,
.. •
••••
e•
, .
Itiot?didtly
Wa7 Lads' lineal's Demist her Dannanws. •
the 46 Plug," -- AWN
--Irzarars- AgenlnIng iazpeylenee Telat'ilso
a Jury.
Tawk-Serilid.
'Mrs. Jessie Izard, an artist, appeared
in the Court of Common' Pleas,. before
Judge V170.12 Brunt and a jam Yesterday,
its plaintiff in a suit .for 115,000 damages
against Dr..John. Westhay, a dentist, whom
she charges' with having fractured her jaw-
bone while he was atteniptiiig "to extract a
tooth on Meta 5thr1882*
Dr. Westbay in hie answer eays. that -•
leire. Izard celled upon him, -intending to.
have two teeth extracted. He says the
()Ingather' was. perfermede evith-eetate-144-7
Sc., denies . that her jawbone wan, ,
fractured or tltat caused the "plug" to
slipdown her throat. He eats that the •
teeth he attempted to •extract Were badly
decayed, -and had been in that condition '
for at least two years previous to the
operation; that one Of them wee so fragile
that it could not be removed from the jaw'
Without being broken, and that notwith-
standing his.hest endeavors the tooth wee
broken off below the surface of the jaw, , •
but no greater injury or pain waif inflicted
in the operation than is ueually int:1146*k: ,
in the removal of teeth. Di. Westbse ,
further charges that Mts. lewd, after the
4iperationAud not take proper care of her
`jaw,. and neglected to hove the broken 'no -
meats of the decayed tooth removedeett,
sita,attiZa%17,11.%-tiw
exist, were -thee result of herown negligence. •
• mos riatrqmo's 1.4samaorrF.;
IWO. Imbed had previously testified a
witness before trial and her examination
yesterday was not materially different from •
that deposition. She stated that she Went .,
to the doctor's offiee with her friend ' Wee
Gray. • She. sit 'in the dental chair and Dr.
'Westbay put a "plug". in her mouth. She
lost eensoioniness after the gas had been
adreihistered, but...when elle had partially
regained her tieneetf she heard Dr. Westbay
exclaim "1 have broken it!" and then SW •
felt the " plug " down her throat; • •
nly t God I". .said • the doctor, ." she is
choking." "He pushed me back in the
• said -Mrs. Izard, "pulled the 'plug'
out • of my' throat,, and threw it in a; corner '
of theroom, and then he walked out of the
room." • , . • .
In her deposition.. Mrs. Izard eaid that -
tithe knew her jai* was freetured,-because
she suffered . incessant ,pain and because
her physician,: Dr.' Albert Little; had told
her so. ,She was sick fora month herjaw
was bendeged with rags; she was not able
'to eat bread or meatier twenty-eight day.
Mot. Izard aleo 'testified that she pante
plahts, portraits, plaques and •'ecteens, and
in May •following the operation had Only
just -finished wink that she had begun Ave
Or hid weeks heft:0 henteeth were taken out,
vv.
. _
THWISTORT, Or A erEemon..
3E01 May Grayethe next witness, said,
that die. aocronipamed Mrs: Izard to the.
office of Dr. Westbay the night of the •
operation; Dr. John Westbay conducted
the operation and Miss Gray sat ln a 'Audit
rightan front Of him ;:ehe saw the ,dootor
administer 'the gas and saw hint, put the
plug in Mrs. Izazd's mouth. Itwas %wooden
"plug," and had no string attached to. it ;
after these, preliminaries -the doctor darita
etied the plume on her totithend gave it c.
pull; the doctoettaid, ",I have broken it;"
Mrs. Iiard was fast regaining. consciente;
hews, but the deotor -put the pincers on
second time, it'nd hi the struggle the • • •
"ping" went her throat; the doctor
said, "My God she lechoking,'? and putting
his finger down Mrs. Izard'e throat pulled
something out and threw it on the' floor •;
"it made ouch noise,"? said the witness. '
that 1 thought it was it great big toeth;".
after the operation the doctor left the toont„
V-WiZfgZgb4A5r,prfj—.zsa,qb.--a-aitcrsril an ea -
cited ; it, few minutes afterward the doctor's .
tie:neaten a dentist,came in, and, taking up
a sponge, washed the basin and f31.0orkik.,,
stead ofneeing *hat he mild do for WS.
Izard When Dr: Jaihit Westbay returned toe
the his -• She, addressing him, said,,
"Yoh.had. no business to ap the witness,
after the operation, took.Mrs. Iiird home
elizseIztirdeseiteredeterriblye'ehd vomited -
blood and her face. became dilioelored ; for
weeks 'the could eat nothing hilt .lieef tea, "
seep and jelly, and the witnese, who at.,
tended her, ilia to feed. her .with ,tea-
spoon.
,• meteteAr. ExAtaxArnitis.
.Dr. Albert Little, !who professionally'
attended 'Mrs. laud during her deities% ,
was next examined.- He said hedisliovercd
that she had all the spilt:tonna of a has-
tured jaw, he put her facie' in bandages,
and, to relieve her pain, admit:teetered nays
cotioe.„ • .
When crossententined by Mr. Bowman
the doctor' Was questioned at length abotti .
the•causepeand results of jawbone.franture•
but he insisted that Mrs. Izard's jawbone •
had.heen fractured without it doubt. •••
Dr* Charlet; F. Wybrew corroborated Dr...
Little. 'He taid that he examined Mai.
Izard's jaW on the 29th of May, 1882, at.
Dr. Little's, °fawn The-javi Widi 'undoulet.r..
edly broken. , - • '
' • ' oo.' wafeelieX'S sews.
Dr. Sohn Westbay4wae the firet Witness •
in hie Own behalf.. He testified that he halt •
been a pracOcing dentist for thirtyeight
years ; on Ahenight Of March 5th, 1882, be
extracted a second molar from Mrs. Izard's
lower jaw and attempted to extract "a
*Worn teeth, hitt. it. broke off ; her teeth '
were Very firmly set, the "plug" whieh
used was about one and one indhen
long and about seven eighths of an inch ln
diameter, e herald not succeed in getting tidt
of all the second tootbo and and from whall
he remerdbers of its,eOndition he believes it
never aotild have been cli`ONLI Without being
crushed; the tooth was badly deeb.yecl ; the
doctor said he did the very beet lie could,
and he denied emphatireally that: there weo
any fracture ()tithe jaw bone.
Henry r, Westbay,son of the dofenAul
and Dr. Fiedinand Ilaebrouck both te
that they bad examined Mrs. URA* ja*
and that there was no fracture,
A. sealed verdict was ottilliftlio TS
verdict qave the lady 8104
Chase 'reeks*. awe he 'win
160,000 with Mho. Itbeethis 06"°r"
21110.
will visit, Anterioit: not ,
Cathdlio bereen eau take any part .iu, the Seaton,. •iAddidel IfatiShaids
ceretteny. Probably the Pope will hot be D'Oyly dotenr0
butVA% instead, seed an Arnold.f idetore tont 32
ee h
represented,
autograph letter to the thnperer, ytilti tie ason.
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